Weight of Gold and Silver Wares Assayed and Marked in Birmingham.

Year ends June 24thGold.
oz.
Silver.
oz.
186530,73399,688
186635,70590,736
186734,11483,501
186836,17079,642
186947,69487,027
187048,12384,323
187158,32381,248
187275,93391,988
187398,134106,415
1874116,325134,949
1875113,642141,123
1876120,019142,148
1877114,772163,047
1878104,202159,847
187987,042166,469
188081,606239,835
188170,466331,209
188286,837511,743
188391,053851,957
188499,799926,968
188597,618888,391

Amount of Plate Duty Collected.

Year ends July 24th.
Date.
Amount.
1865£11,114
186611,493
18679,941
18689,761
186910,505
187010,767
187111,270
187212,603
187314,889
187417,898
187518,202
Year ends June 24th.
187618,689
187719,053
187818,406
187915,752
188013,898
188115,141
188218,649
188319,663
188420,943
188520,221

Number of Assays made in Birmingham.

Date.Number.
18431,685
18532,477
18636,823
187338,138
1883101,012

Bedsteads, Iron and Brass.—[L. Brierley.]—(B. 624.) In 1849 there were only about eight manufacturers of metallic bedsteads in Birmingham and the neighbourhood, whose united production probably reached 400 finished articles per week. In 1865 the number had increased to twenty, with a weekly output of about 5,000; the number of makers within a radius of fifteen miles is about forty, and the weekly production not far short of 20,000. As the number of manufacturers increased, and competition necessarily became keener, so improvements were continually being effected. The old imitation bamboo cane gave way to more artistic effects of colour. The pillars and rails were decorated with flowers and Dutch metal, or with gold—accomplished partly by hand, and partly by the process (long known in the potteries for ornamenting china ware) called transferring. This somewhat pronounced, if not “loud” style of decoration, though still in demand for foreign countries, has in its turn been replaced by plain polished surfaces, relieved at intervals with brass, nickel, or silver plated joints, and mountings. Prices range now (1886) from 5/- or 6/- for a plain stump bedstead to £100 for electro-silver plated canopy or fore part constructed to suit Oriental taste. The United States now buys and also makes metallic bedsteads. Australia, New Zealand, the Cape, Mauritius, Canada, East and West Indies, the States of South America, Egypt, China, and to some extent, Japan, purchase.

About 500 persons are now employed in Birmingham and neighbourhood in the bedstead trade; the average earnings of men are about 23/- per week, and of women about 14/- per week.

Within the last ten years wire mattresses have been introduced. The price was formerly £4 to £5 for a mattress, according to width. Now a good one may be obtained at a price varying from 20/- to 40/-.

While Birmingham and the district is the principal seat of the bedstead trade there are extensive manufactories in London, Manchester, Glasgow, and Bristol. Metallic bedsteads are also made extensively in France, Spain, Italy, Germany, and of late years in the United States also. A great number are, however, still exported to Spain and America in spite of the native competition, and protective duties amounting to 45 per cent. Our trade with Spain is very much reduced of late years in consequence of England being denied the advantage of “the favoured nation” clause.